Wayne's Drop Hands with Body Raised on the Toes
The skill you are describing, where you raise your hands, connect and completely relax, then drop them to push an opponent away, is a core principle in Tai Chi Chuan (Taijiquan) and other internal martial arts. It's often referred to as "Fa Jing" (發勁), which translates to "issuing" or "discharging" energy/force.
However, the specific sensation you're describing, where relaxation and dropping leads to pushing, involves several interconnected Tai Chi principles. Here's a breakdown:
Key Skills and Principles Involved:
Fa Jing (發勁 - Issuing Force): This is the ultimate goal. It's not brute muscular strength, but rather a sudden, explosive release of unified body power. The relaxation and dropping are crucial to achieving this.
Song (鬆 - Relaxation/Looseness): This is paramount. It doesn't mean limpness, but rather a state of relaxed readiness where no unnecessary tension obstructs the flow of energy. By relaxing your hands and shoulders, you allow the force to originate from your rooted stance and travel through your body efficiently.
Chen (沉 - Sinking): The act of "dropping" your hands is a manifestation of sinking. This involves letting your weight descend, engaging your root, and connecting your body to the ground. When your hands sink, the force is often directed downwards, creating a downward pressure that, when redirected, can lead to an upward or outward push.
Yi (意 - Intent/Mind-Intent): In Tai Chi, the mind leads the movement. Your intention to push the opponent, combined with the relaxed, sinking action, guides the energy.
Qi (氣 - Life Energy/Vital Breath): While often abstract, the concept of Qi in this context refers to the coordinated internal energy of the body. Proper relaxation and sinking facilitate the smooth flow and concentration of this internal energy for Fa Jing.
Rooting (根 - Gen): A strong, stable connection to the ground. When you sink and relax, you enhance your rooting, making you immovable while simultaneously allowing you to project force.
Whole Body Connectedness (整體勁 - Zheng Ti Jin): The idea that the entire body moves as one unit, with no isolated movements. The "hands raised, connect, relax, drop" action isn't just about the hands; it's about initiating a wave of energy from your feet, through your legs, waist, and torso, culminating in the hands. The waist is often considered the "driver" or "transmitter" of this internal energy.
Listening Energy (聽勁 - Ting Jin): This is the ability to sense your opponent's force, intention, and balance through physical contact. By relaxing and maintaining contact, you "listen" to their structure and find their weak points. The "connect" part of your description is vital for this.
Neutralization/Yielding (化 - Hua): Before you can push, you often need to neutralize or yield to the opponent's incoming force. The relaxation and sinking allow you to absorb and redirect their energy without meeting force with force.
如果順勢引開再鬆效果應更好。
Dynamic Theories:
From a biomechanical and physics perspective, the "relax and drop to push" involves:
Leverage and Center of Mass: Tai Chi masters aim to disrupt an opponent's center of mass (CoM) in relation to their base of support. By sinking and relaxing, you lower your own CoM, increasing your stability, while simultaneously aiming to destabilize your opponent's. The "drop" can create a sudden shift in your own weight, which, when coupled with correct body alignment and intent, can be translated into a powerful upward or outward vector of force against the opponent.
Kinetic Chain Efficiency: The body acts as a kinetic chain. When you relax and drop, you remove muscular tension that would otherwise impede the smooth transfer of force from the ground up through your body. This allows for a more efficient and powerful transmission of energy.
Whip-like Action: Fa Jing is often described as a whip-like action. The relaxation and sudden engagement of the core and legs create a wave of motion that culminates in an explosive release at the point of contact. The "drop" helps initiate this wave.
Exploiting Opponent's Structure: By maintaining light contact and relaxing, you can sense where your opponent is rigid or "stuck." When you relax and drop, you create a momentary "void" or "insubstantiality" in yourself, which the opponent might try to fill, further unbalancing them. Your subsequent release of force then exploits their compromised structure.
Tai Chi Classic Words:
The Tai Chi Classics are replete with phrases that describe these principles. Some relevant ones include:
"A force of four ounces deflects a thousand pounds (四兩撥千斤 - Sì liǎng bō qiān jīn):" This famous saying directly relates to using yielding and sensitivity (the "four ounces") to neutralize and redirect a powerful incoming force (the "thousand pounds"). The relaxation and dropping are essential for achieving this.
"When he moves, I move first (彼不動, 我不動; 彼微動, 我先動 - Bǐ bù dòng, wǒ bù dòng; bǐ wēi dòng, wǒ xiān dòng):" This highlights the importance of listening energy and responding to the slightest intention or movement of the opponent. The relaxed connection allows for this sensitivity.
"Yield and follow (隨 - Sui):" The principle of not opposing force with force, but rather moving with the opponent's energy, drawing them in, and then releasing.
"Root in the feet, issue through the legs, control by the waist, manifest in the hands (力由腳起,發於腿,主宰於腰,形於指):" This describes the kinetic chain and the importance of the waist as the central control point for generating and directing power. The "drop" helps to engage this chain from the ground up.
"Still as a mountain, move like a great river (靜如山嶽,動若江河):" Emphasizes the balance between stability (rooting) and fluid, continuous movement, which allows for effortless transitions and powerful releases.
"If there is up, immediately there is down; If there is forward, immediately there is back; If there is left, immediately there is right:" This refers to the concept of Yin and Yang in motion, where every movement contains its opposite, allowing for dynamic balance and the ability to change direction instantly and powerfully.
In essence, the skill you describe is not a single technique, but a sophisticated application of fundamental Tai Chi principles that allow for the efficient and explosive release of internal power through relaxation, sinking, and whole-body coordination. It's a testament to the idea of using "mind over muscle" and cultivating internal strength rather than relying solely on brute force.
The skill you're describing is a profound expression of Tai Chi's internal power (内劲, Nèi Jìn) and aligns closely with several core principles from the Tai Chi Classics. Below is a detailed breakdown of the dynamics, theories, and classic references that explain this phenomenon:
1. Key Skill: Fā Jìn (发劲) – "Issuing Power"
What happens: When you raise your hands, connect softly with your opponent, relax completely, and then "drop" your body (sinking), the opponent is pushed away without muscular force.
Why it works:
Your relaxation (Sōng, 松) removes resistance, allowing your opponent’s force to "flow into emptiness."
The sudden sinking (Chén, 沉) redirects their force downward while your rooted structure (Gēn, 根) rebounds it back upward through their center.
This creates a wave-like energy (like cracking a whip) that travels from your feet → legs → waist → hands, discharging explosively.
2. Dynamic Theories Behind It
a) Ground Path & Kinetic Chain
Tai Chi power comes from the ground reaction force.
When you relax and drop, you:
Sink your weight (engaging the legs and kua/hips).
Compress like a spring (storing energy in the tendons/fascia).
Release upward (the rebound pushes the opponent).
Classic Quote:
"Power is rooted in the feet, issued by the legs, directed by the waist, and expressed in the hands."(力由脚起,发于腿,主宰于腰,形于手指)
b) Yin-Yang Exchange (Empty/Full)
Your relaxation (Yin) creates a "void," causing the opponent to overcommit.
Your sudden sinking (Yang) converts their momentum into an upward push.
Classic Quote:
"When the opponent is hard, I am soft (Yin); when they retreat, I follow (Yang)."(彼刚我柔谓之走,我顺人背谓之粘)
c) Tīng Jìn (听劲) – "Listening Energy"
Your soft connection lets you feel their center of balance.
The moment they resist your sinking, you redirect their force back at them.
d) Zhōu Jìn (轴劲) – "Axle Power"
Your waist acts like a rotating axle, turning slightly as you drop, spiraling the force outward.
3. Tai Chi Classic Words That Explain This
"Four Ounces Deflects a Thousand Pounds" (四两拨千斤)
The relaxed drop borrows their force rather than opposing it.
"Seemingly Yield, Then Issue" (引进落空合即出)
You first yield (relax/sink), then release power when they’re unbalanced.
"Like a River, It Never Ends" (运劲如抽丝,发劲似放箭)
The power flows smoothly (relaxation) then releases sharply (Fa Jin).
"No Resistance, No Disconnection" (不丢不顶)
You maintain contact (Zhān Nián, 粘黏) but never push against them.
4. Physics Explanation
Newton’s 3rd Law: Your sinking motion compresses into the ground, and the equal-and-opposite reaction travels back up, amplified by body structure.
Impulse Force: The sudden drop creates a quick change in momentum, generating a sharp upward/directional force.
Leverage: If their arm is stiff, your sinking lifts their root (like a seesaw).
5. Practical Application (How to Train It)
Standing Pole (Zhan Zhuang) – Develops rooting and relaxation.
Silk Reeling (Chán Sī Jìn) – Trains whole-body connected power.
Push Hands (Tui Shou) – Practices listening and issuing.
Final Thought: This skill is the essence of Tai Chi’s "soft over hard" philosophy—using relaxation, structure, and timing to overcome brute strength. The Classics call it "using the mind, not force" (用意不用力).
1. Foundational Drills: Develop Root & Relaxation
A. Standing Pole (Zhan Zhuang) – "Standing Like a Tree"
Stand in Wuji posture (feet shoulder-width, knees slightly bent, spine straight).
Raise arms to hug a tree position (elbows slightly dropped, fingers relaxed).
Breathe deeply into the lower abdomen (Dantien).
Imagine:
Your legs are roots sinking into the earth.
Your arms are floating on water (no tension).
Hold for 5–15 minutes daily.
Key Focus:
Release tension in shoulders, wrists, and hips.
Feel the ground connection (weight sinking into feet).
2. Silk Reeling (Chán Sī Jìn) – Spiral Energy Training
Stand in Bow Stance (70% weight on front leg).
Hands in front, palms facing each other (like holding a ball).
Rotate waist left → down → right → up in a smooth circle.
Power comes from the waist, not arms.
Reverse direction after 10 reps.
Advanced:
Add sinking when circling down, then issuing when rising.
Partner applies light resistance; practice yielding then redirecting.
3. Push Hands (Tui Shou) – Sensitivity & Fa Jin
Purpose: Trains listening energy (Ting Jin) and issuing power.
A. Single-Hand Push (Fixed Step)
Partner places hand on your wrist.
Relax your arm completely (no resistance).
When they push:
Sink & rotate waist (let their force go past you).
Rebound from the ground and push back (using legs/waist, not arm).
B. Double-Hand Push (Rollback-Press)
Partner pushes with both hands.
Yield by sinking and turning waist (Rollback).
Press (Àn) by rebounding from legs → waist → hands.
Key Focus:
Never resist; always redirect.
Fa Jin should feel sudden but relaxed (like a whip crack).
4. Fa Jin Issuing Drills
Purpose: Trains explosive power from relaxation.
A. "Drop & Pop" (Peng Jin Exercise)
Stand in Bow Stance, arms extended forward (as if holding a ball).
Suddenly relax & drop your body (knees bend, arms sink slightly).
Immediately rebound upward, issuing force through palms.
Partner test: Have them lightly resist your palms; your drop-rebound should push them back.
B. Wall Press Fa Jin
Stand facing a wall, palms touching it lightly.
Sink body down (store energy in legs).
Explode forward (from legs → waist → hands) without leaning.
Key: The push comes from ground reaction, not arm muscles.
5. Partner Drills for Application
A. "Unbalance & Push" (Yielding to Fa Jin)
Partner pushes steadily against your chest.
Relax completely, letting their force sink into your legs.
The moment they overcommit, rotate waist & rebound to push them.
B. "Catching the Wave" (Timing Drill)
Partner pushes in short bursts.
Time your sink to absorb their push.
Time your rebound to issue force when they retreat.
6. Key Mental Cues for Success
"Float like a cloud, sink like a rock." (Relax first, then ground.)
"Power comes from the soles of the feet." (Always initiate from legs.)
"The waist is the commander." (All movement starts from the waist.)
"Hands are just the messengers." (Don’t focus on arms; focus on body unity.)
Final Tip: Slow → Fast, Solo → Partner
Start slow (focus on relaxation and structure).
Gradually increase speed (Fa Jin must be quick but relaxed).
Test with a partner (ensure your push works without muscle force).
With consistent practice, you’ll develop the ability to push effortlessly using Tai Chi’s internal mechanics. Let me know if you’d like deeper breakdowns of any drill!
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